Totally wrong Srirangan. Hindu is derived from the Vedic word "Sindhu", Avestan is a separate language classification used in a different locale during Vedic times. The precursor of modern Persian/Fars was Old Persian, with Avestan developing alongside itm but Avestan language grew to be extinct with no related descendant (see any language map).
It is generalization of you think Hindu is derived from the only word Sindhu, I'll give you some of the possible leaneage of the name.
1. Sapta Sindhu becomes Hapta Hindu is one by the Greeks.
2. Persian dictionary titled Lughet-e-Kishwari, published in Lucknow in 1964, gives the meaning of the word Hindu as “chore [thief], dakoo [dacoit], raahzan [waylayer], and ghulam [slave].” In another dictionary, Urdu-Feroze-ul-Laghat (Part One, p. 615) the Persian meaning of the word Hindu is further described as barda (obedient servant), sia faam (balck color) and kaalaa (black).
3. The idea that rishis of old, several thousand years ago, also called central India Hindustan, and the people who lived there Hindus. The following verse, said to be from the Vishnu Purana, Padma Purana and the Bruhaspati Samhita states that,
Aaasindo Sindhu Paryantham Yasyabharatha Bhoomikah
MathruBhuh Pithrubhoochaiva sah Vai Hindurithismrithaah
4. Another verse reads as,
Sapta sindhu muthal Sindhu maha samudhram vareyulla Bharatha bhoomi aarkkellamaano Mathru bhoomiyum Pithru bhoomiyumayittullathu, avaraanu hindukkalaayi ariyappedunnathu.
Both of these verses more or less indicate that whoever considers the land of Bharatha Bhoomi between Sapta Sindu and the Indian Ocean as his or her motherland and fatherland is known as Hindu. However, here we also have a ancient name of India mentioned, which is Bharata Bhoomi. “Bhoomi” (or Bhumi) means Mother Earth, but Bharata is the land of Bharata or Bharata-varsha, which is the land of India. In numerous Vedic references in the Puranas, Mahabharata and other Vedic texts, the area of India is referred to as Bharata-varsha or the land of Bharata and not as Hindustan.
5. Another,
Himalayam Samaarafya Yaavat Hindu Sarovaram
Tham Devanirmmitham desham Hindustanam Prachakshathe
Himalyam muthal maha samudhram vareyulla
devanirmmithamaya deshaththe Hindustanam ennu parayunnu
These again indicate that the region between the Himalayas and the Indian Ocean is called Hindustan.
6. In the Rig Veda, Bharata is referred to as the country of “Sapta Sindhu”, i.e. the country of seven great rivers. This is, of course, acceptable. However, exactly which book and chapter this verse comes from needs to be clarified. Nonetheless, the word “Sindhu” refers to sea in Vedas, and not merely to the specific river called “Sindhu” or place called Sindh.
There is a famous quote, 'bindu Bindu mil ke hota hai Sindhu'.
7. Ancient Persians referred to Bharat as “Hapta Hind”, as recorded in their ancient classic “Bem Riyadh”. So this is another reason why some scholars came to believe that the word “Hindu” had its origin in Persia.
8. Another theory is that the name “Hindu” by Mr. A. Krishna Kumar of Hyderabad, He cites an argument from the book Self-Government in India by N. B. Pavgee, published in 1912. The author tells of an old Swami and Sanskrit scholar Mangal Nathji, who found an ancient Purana known as Brihannaradi in the Sham village, Hoshiarpur, Punjab. It contained this verse:
himalayam samarabhya yavat bindusarovaram
hindusthanamiti qyatam hi antaraksharayogatah
It means, The country lying between the Himalayan mountains and Bindu Sarovara (Cape Comorin sea) is known as Hindusthan by combination of the first letter ‘hi’ of ‘Himalaya’ and the last compound letter ‘ndu’ of the word ‘Bindu'.
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These are only a few, of many. Thus Hinduism is better known as Sanatana-dharma. We dont call our religion as religion or some sort of ity and ism, because the doctrines of that of 'ity and 'ism are different. We call it dharma and adharma. You wont find proper English of the same.
The same mistake people makes while terming us as idol worshippers when it is actually Icon or Murthi worshipper.
sometime, You cannot find suitable translation of the exact text in English.
The etimology of ism and ity are here,
ity:
Main Entry: -ity
Function: noun suffix
Inflected Form(s): plural -ities
Etymology: Middle French -ité, from Latin -itat-, -itas, from -i- (stem vowel of adjs.) + -tat-, -tas -ity; akin to Greek -tEt-, -tEs -ity
: quality : state : degree
ism:
Main Entry: ism
Pronunciation: 'i-z&m
Function: noun
Etymology: -ism
1 : a distinctive doctrine, cause, or theory
2 : an oppressive and especially discriminatory attitude or belief
Agreed. Hindu was in reference to Sindhu, which was the area of modern day Pakistan, not India. However
Wrong, the culture of sindh was spreaded over What is present day Pakistan to punjab, Gujrat and later some other places of UP as well.
And do you know Sindhu means Seas in Veda as well other than just rivers? So you have to bring which part of Rig Veda and in which context your talking of.
what the people of the Indus practised was not Hinduism, but Vedism, a completely different religion/way of living to modern day Hinduism in India
Right and Wrong, while Vedism and Hinduism as practiced today has definite differences in them, Way of living in Hinduism has nothing to do with the religion of Hinduism because there is no such prequisite way of living in Hinduism, thus the way of living may have changed but the philosophy havent.
Hinduism has evolved Absorbing Vedism as one of its many compiled books. it doesnt means Hinduism as it is today is same as Vedism per se, same as it doesnt means Hinduism doesnt has Vedism in it per se.
So overall I agree with you but not in absolute generalization sense if you say Vedism and Hinduism are different and draw a absurd lineage of Indra without knowing the proper philosophical aspect.
You can try living here and get some bunch of Vedic teachings and convert to Vedism, learn them and live life according to them, I can assure you you wont find much difference with that of the local hindus living here, other than difference in local customs.
There are places in India who practices stern Vedism (Arya Samaj), there are peoples who practices Local customs and keeps the philosophy same, so dont mix way of living with that of philosophy.
Modern day Hinduism and traditional Vedism in ancient Pakistan (Saptha Sindhu, or as the Greeks called it Haptha Hindu), are not the same
On way of living aspects same or not - Depends on where you live and how you live but not same in most places,
It isnt same with contemporary Dravidian parallel cultures of that time as well which were no less developed than harappan ones in short. Dravidian terminology here is used not as genetical/philosophical pool but cultural and linguistical pool.
On Philosophical aspect same or not - Again see above one is from absorbing other, but has evolved over the years as well.
Christianity/Islam is nothing without old testausments etc isnt it?
Indra was an Aryan God of the Vedic Aryans, the central figure of the Rig Veda, that became reduced to a secondary figure in some of the later Dravidianized texts that were written from Bharat.
What are those texts?
How do you know reducing the role of a god gives you the evidence of Hinduism not having lineage with Vedism? We consider the gods themselves to be later than Creation.
You dont even understand even the basic philosophy of Hinduism. Dogmatic Theological interpration would never work for interprating Dharmic faiths.
The Aryan invasion only occurred into what is today Pakistan, and Punjab of India. Everywhere else in the subcontinent is pretty much Dravidian.
There was no Aryan invasion occurred, but you guys in Pakistan were the one to invade other places, not invade I'd rather say per se but yes transfer of genetical pool.
Here the theory of non Aryan invasion is based on subcontinent as a whole which includes Sri Lanka and Pakistan and India.
My non-AIT is based on the euro-centric thought of AIT.
??
The term Aryan is currently a linguistical grouping. The 72% "Aryan" India figure is simply a statistics used to denote Aryan speaking Dravidians. However, the Aryans were a historical group of people, as the Rig Veda, which was written in Pakistan attest to.
Aryan-Dravidian linguistic grouping is what I agree with. Rig Veda was not written, it was compiled.
Ps : I'll have to check if there are any errors in my post per se...and Dont we think we are going off topic with all of a bunch of new type of discussion you suddenly poured in it? We are not discussion how much similarity Hinduism and Vedism in philosophical aspect or based on practise have but something different.